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Monday, 8 May 2017

Keeping Friends Closer and Drawn Lines Redder

This article was written jointly by Roger Froikin and Bat-Zion Susskind-Sacks

Picture this, it is Passover. You
invite Christian friends, guests, to you family Seder. You start to read the
Haggadah, and just when you get to the part where Jews say how we are to see
ourselves, not just our ancestors, as being brought out of slavery to freedom,
our Christian friends say, “hey that’s not what your Seder means, it is an allegory
for the coming of Christ and the resurrection.”

What do you do?

Some Jews would sit there quietly, smile,
and start to discuss what these Christians inserted in the celebration. To
their children, this would appear as acceptance of the Christian
interpretation.

Well,
that is not what Jews should be doing.
Jews need to say, “yes, we want friends, but friends respect one another
and these Christians were not acting like friends. The Jews who chose to ignore
their lack of manners and aggressive should be ashamed of themselves.”

Yet, In the State of Israel today, Medinat Yisrael, in Eretz Yisrael the Jewish
Homeland, there are places where this scenario is being played out in reality.
No one is responsible nor seems to want to draw the line between acceptable and
not acceptable. In some places missionaries are telling Jews what Jews should
believe, while some Jews look down and say nothing.

They claim to be our friends. They declare that they love us. Moreover, they
claim that they are here in Eretz Yisrael to help us, serve us and to fulfill
the calling of the prophecyווּבְנֵי הַנֵּכָר, הַנִּלְוִים עַל-יְהוָה לְשָׁרְתוֹ,
וּלְאַהֲבָה אֶת-שֵׁם יְהוָה, לִהְיוֹת לוֹ לַעֲבָדִים (And foreigners who bind themselves to the LORD to minister
to him, to love the name of the LORD, and to be his servants,) (Isaiah 56:6).

Some of us ask, and justifiably so, is that the real reason? Rather, is this
the only reason?

As a
people who has been deprived of love by others for so long, such an offer is,
of course, very tempting. For who does not want to be loved. Who does not want
to have free servants and volunteers to do the dirty work for them?

So, they were given a place to set up their camp. They are adorned and adulated
by those they help. They invite their friends to come and stay with them. They
organize Shabbat events where Jews and Christians meet and mingle. They conduct
Christian weddings with Jewish rituals to which they invite local observant Jews
and which the latter attend thus condoning such practices.

Frankly, we have no problem inviting strangers as guests to our private home
and our National Home, especially those who claim to be our friends. Our issue,
however, is when these guests, these friends feel that they have a right to
teach us, to expose us to that which is as foreign to us, that which is
poisonous to us, spiritually, and nationally. They feel it is their duty, as
our friends, to teach us that which we have never asked for, nor ever wanted.

Their upbringing and their belief pave their way toward one and one goal only,
to make everyone, especially those that they consider their friends, that which
is what they are, embrace and adopt that which they believe in. For them there
is one way and one way only, their way.

And their way is to share with and educate Jews about “this Jesus that” they
“know.” Their vision is to share with us “this passion, this soon coming jubilee
[Yovel in Hebrew] in Yeshua HaMessiah.”

AND, THAT
IS WHERE WE MUST DRAW THE LINE

Interestingly,
during the Crusades, when Christians, directed by their leaders, were busy
murdering Jews on the way to fight the Muslims for Jerusalem, one Roman Catholic
Bishop warned that some Jews should be spared because
the Second Coming of Christ would be from among the Jews. He drew a line. And one might ask Christians,
were they successful in converting all the Jews so that Judaism would
disappear, how would their Jesus come back?

So, that
is our question. Where will we draw the
line? Where and when will we demand
respect for us and our traditions and our Torah? When will our people understand that
friendship does not mean having to beg for it, to ingratiate oneself for it or
to compromise one’s own standards for it.

DRAW THE
LINE. RESPECT OTHERS WHO RESPECT US.

And that
means no missionary activity directed toward Jews. No telling Jews what Jewish literature that
was written for Jews in the Hebrew language “really” means as interpreted by
outsiders.

Moreover,
Jews wake up. See things as they are,
not just how you want them to be, desperate for approval and friendship. What
do you imagine will happen when Christians who so desperately want us Jews to
join them are thwarted?

2 comments:

The best anti-missionary laws are not found with international laws or State laws but are fouind in the Torah. Uncomprising and from Hashem. Jews need to ask if their goal is a Jewish Israel or what we have now a State for Jews with laws dictated and applied to us from the interntaional community as well as our own laws in the State that reflect the international community :-)As far as inviting strangers go would we invite a child molestor into our home even if they are on "good behavior"?

Perhaps it is a shock to meet a Jew who knows their history. So many of us don't rally know. Of course, in this case, I am talking about Americans. It used to be that boys and girls went to Hebrew school, but that is more and more unusual. Christians have gone to Sunday school all of their lives. They get the same misinformation, reinforced every week. They think they have reached Nirvana and needed to share it with everyone else. They have made a significant discovery. And, so they go. Now they can find some Jews and teach them. But, they never read the BIBLE. They would have to understand it in context, in Hebrew, to understand the blasphemy they spew.So, sometimes, being polite is all you can do, because there are some people that can't be told anything. Just don't invite those people back.